Delicious Desserts from Around the World

Delicious Desserts from Around the World

One of my favorite questions I’ve been able to answer this summer was from a lady eating carrots. She asked me, as she was putting a bright orange carrot in her mouth, “Is this the same carrot I saw you pick 30 minutes ago?” My answer was, “Yes.”

In the summer time Chris and I manage an Inn and we are so fortunate that we consistently get asked why our food taste so different and what makes it so good. There are no crazy secrets, we use fresh (often right from our own garden) ingredients and put in the time to prepare them into a nutritious meal. With all the processed foods and grab and go meals so readily available to us,  it’s easy to forgot the crunch of a fresh carrot. We’ve served kale to people who didn’t know what kale was until that evening and converted folks who swore they hated beets into people who left the lodge deciding beets weren’t actually all that bad.

I am so fortunate that I am able to travel around the world trying different kinds of food. When I am not being served food in some far flung destination, we are rewarded with many compliments on our cooking and presentation because of the care in both selecting ingredients and preparing the food for our guests. People ask us all the time if our recipes are secret. They are not. The lodge sells a cook book with the recipes we serve and we spend a good amount of time explaining what ingredients are in our food and where it comes from.

Tiff diving into eating churros from a street truck in Chile.

Tiff diving into eating churros from a street truck in Chile.

In all aspects, the way we grow and prepare our food is changing in a big way. This is no surprise to anyone who is trying to avoid eating carpet fire retardant (brominated vegetable oil often found in soft drinks), rocket fuel (chemical DHMO often used in fruit drinks), agents of explosive metals for war (NaCl chemical often used in salty snacks). If any of you are looking for a cause, join the food revolution. Any efforts to squash Monsanto’s take over of our global agriculture is a worthy investment. If you don’t know, Monsanto is the world’s leading producer of genetically engineered foods as well as the herbicide glyphosate which markets under the Roundup brand. Good documentaries to watch on this are King Corn , Fresh and Food, Inc. Every time you are in the super market you can be a food warrior by purchasing local and organic products. Commit to sourcing one food item you use regularly from a local supplier. Once you start looking, I’d bet you’ll be surprised by how much you might find around you. Create a mission to find food close to home and be proud to call yourself a modern day forager.

People often comment that our food tastes different and it does. Homemade does not mean from a box. Frosting is not from a can. Cookies should not come from a tube. Subway does not really bake nutritious bread. Have you heard because of public outcry they finally removed a carcinogen from their bread? Yup – the same chemical used in yoga mats and rubber soles of shoes was also being used in the bread at one of the world’s supposedly healthy food chains. The corporation didn’t remove this chemical out of the goodness of their heart over concern of peoples health and the environment, they removed it because of one blogger, Vani Hari of FoodBabe.com, campaigned to get them to stop.

Cooking healthy and enjoying homemade food is attainable to us and should not be something that happens only at Grandmas house and in the good old days. We’ve been so fortunate to try food from so many wonderful places. The readers have spoken and based on your requests here is a sampling of our favorite dessert recipes from around the world:

Vermont:

Carrot Cake

Carrot Cake

Carrot Cake

Yield 2 – 10 inch round layers

Ingredients

  • 6 cups grated carrots
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1 cup raisins
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups white sugar
  • 1 cup vegetable oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup crushed pineapple, drained
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 4 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts (optional)

Directions

  1. In a medium bowl, combine grated carrots and brown sugar. Set aside for 60 minutes, then stir in raisins.
  2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease and flour two 10 inch cake pans.
  3. In a large bowl, beat eggs until light. Gradually beat in the white sugar, oil and vanilla. Stir in the pineapple. Combine the flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon, stir into the wet mixture until absorbed. Finally stir in the carrot mixture and the walnuts. Pour evenly into the prepared pans.
  4. Bake for 45 to 50 minutes in the preheated oven, until cake tests done with a toothpick. Cool for 10 minutes before removing from pan. When completely cooled, frost with cream cheese frosting.

Cream Cheese Frosting:

  • 8 oz. cream cheese – softened
  • 1/2 stick butter – softened

Blend together with mixers.

  • Add ~1/2 ts vanilla
  • 3 cups confectionary sugar

Blend with mixers until desired consistency adding more sugar or milk until you got it right.

 *     *     *

Australia:

Tiff working as a barista in Australia.

Tiff working as a barista in Australia.

 Lemon Brownies

  • 1 cup butter
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 ½ cups flour
  • 1 cup coconut
  • 3 tsp (or more!) finely grated lemon rind
  • ¼ cup fresh lemon juice
  • Icing sugar to dust

Preheat 350 and about a 9×13 pan, put down wax paper and spray it! Make sure lemon brownies are not too thick because they will cook forever, but the middle will never be done.

Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Remove from heat. Stir in sugar. Add eggs, 1 at a time, and stir mixture till thick and glossy.

Sift flour over eggs mixture and stir till well combined. Stir in coconut, lemon rind and lemon juice. Spread over base of pan.

Bake ~30 min. Cool, lift out, ideally with 2 ppl holding waxed paper. Cut, dust with icing sugar or chocolate, enjoy!

*     *     *

New Zealand:

I don't have any pictures of the slices from NZ, but here's us with Milford Sound in the background.

I don’t have any pictures of the slices from NZ, but here’s us with Milford Sound in the background.

Caramel Slice

  • 1 c sifted flour
  • 1/2 c brown sugar
  • 1/2 c coconut
  • 125 grams butter

Combine in a bowl and press into a 28×18 cm pan. Bake 15-20 min at 350 F until lightly golden.

Filling:

  • 400 gram sweetened condensed milk
  • 2tb golden syrup
  • 60 gram melted butter

Combine all in a sauce pan over medium heat. Cook whisking for about 8 min or until golden. Pour over base and bake for ~12 min or until firm.

Topping:

  • 60 gram copha (copha is solidified coconut oil)
  • 125 grams cooking chocolate, chopped

Place in a double boiler -or- put a glass measuring cup into a pot of gently boiling water to create the same effect. Stir constantly until melted. Pour over the caramel and let cool. Slice into little squares and enjoy with tea or coffee. Bring these to a shared potluck and you will make friends!

From Home:

Gourmet cheesecake made every year on my birthday.

Gourmet cheesecake made every year on my birthday.

Cheesecake – every year until I don’t know when it stopped, my mom made this cheesecake recipe four times throughout: once for my birthday, my sisters, my dads and hers. It was our family tradition and we have made this dessert for so many occasion. This recipe also freezes very well.

Cheesecake

  • 1 c graham cracker crumbs
  • 3 tb sugar
  • 3 tb melted butter

Mix together and bake at 325 F for 8-10 min

  • 3 8oz cream cheese, softened (must be softened!)
  • ¾ c sugar
  • 1 tb lemon juice
  • 3 eggs

Reduce heat to 300 F. Mix cream cheese, sugar, lemon juice. Add 1 egg at a time, beat well, but do not over beat. Bake 300 for 55 min.

  • 1 c sour cream
  • 2 tb sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla

Mix the above and spread on top. Bake 10 min more.

Ideally, cool overnight, or at least 4 hours.

*     *     *

Food is one of the most important topics of our time. I don’t know if food has ever really not been important. In the cave days, being able to scour enough food was a big deal so one wouldn’t starve and die. Now not overeating and consequently attaining a myriad of health problems leading to an early death is a big deal. Food was, is and will always be a critical element for our survival as humans. Many times since the invention of the wheel I think we like to believe ourselves to be the most intelligent and advanced species. When it’s raining acid on our homes, we can’t drink much of our water and our food grows better in laboratories than in fields, I question if we can calculate our progress as progress. Every bite we put in our mouth helps create the path for the future of our food. The question is, what are you biting on?

Hope you enjoyed this post about some Delicious Desserts from Around the World.

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10 Responses to “Delicious Desserts from Around the World

  • Oooh what good looking desserts! They all sound delicious! Now I have to go find something sweet to eat…

    • I do love making desserts. And soups. And really good salads. There’s always room for dessert! Yum!

  • dj brian
    9 years ago

    That’s it tiff….you hit my favorite subject!!!!!….FOOD…as I devour 1/3 of a home made apple pie!…..Stay Safe

    • tiffany
      9 years ago

      Food is such an integral part of a culture. Theses are just a few desserts we make regularly. There is so much good food out there!

  • Laura Shephard
    9 years ago

    Oh nom nom nom nom….. cakes! Nom nom nom. Now I am going to have to make them all! Nom nom nom

    • tiffany
      9 years ago

      Oh man, make those lemon brownies for dessert at the night dinner party you go to, you will be the talk of the party. People go nuts over those brownies! Also great to serve with ice cream or drizzle hot fudge over them.

  • christine
    9 years ago

    Well Tiff, as you know this is a topic dear to my heart and stomach! I am so glad you made people aware of dangerous food additives and you even mentioned a couple I was unaware of. I am glad you mentioned Food Babe and I support her movement. If anyone out there isn’t familiar with her they should check her out. I am planning to make your carrot cake for upcoming birthday and I can use the carrot pulp from juicing so its a win win! Thanks again for educating us on so many levels. Have a great day! 🙂

    • tiffany
      9 years ago

      Thanks Christine! It’s good for all of us to try and avoid eating rocket fuel I think. Food Babe is such an awesome site to use as a resource for healthy eating. I wish I could eat the carrot cake you will make, I’m sure it will be delicious! 🙂

  • great stuff on the food industry did you ever read the book skinny bitch if you don’t mind some off color wording its a great book its amazing how much crap they put in food and we wonder why we are getting cancer immune diseases obesity and the many other ones, if we ate like they did way back when with the healthcare we have today we would probably live to be 200 haa haa

    • tiffany
      9 years ago

      Hi Debbie, I have not read that book, but I heard good things about it. It really is mind blowing all the stuff they put in our food and we still call it food. There’s some good photos around if you google ‘food pharmacy’ where instead of a shelf full of pill bottles it shows a fridge full of fresh food. Something to think about! Thanks for sharing. 🙂

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